Article contents
Emotional memories and how your life may depend upon them
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2018
Abstract
In this commentary, we discuss how one's internal body state and the appraisals an individual utilizes at encoding alter later episodic memory irrespective of social discourse. We suggest that the purpose of episodic memory is originally the preservation of the self, which may have been co-opted to navigating the social world.
- Type
- Open Peer Commentary
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018
References
- 2
- Cited by
Target article
Why do we remember? The communicative function of episodic memory
Related commentaries (33)
An adaptive function of mental time travel: Motivating farsighted decisions
Autonoesis and dissociative identity disorder
Autonoesis and reconstruction in episodic memory: Is remembering systematically misleading?
Beyond communication: Episodic memory is key to the self in time
Carving event and episodic memory at their joints
Confabulation and epistemic authority
Constructive episodic simulation, flexible recombination, and memory errors
Developmental roots of episodic memory
Doing without metarepresentation: Scenario construction explains the epistemic generativity and privileged status of episodic memory
Emotional memories and how your life may depend upon them
Encoding third-person epistemic states contributes to episodic reconstruction of memories
Enhanced action control as a prior function of episodic memory
Episodic memory and consciousness in antisocial personality disorder and conduct disorder
Episodic memory and the witness trump card
Episodic memory is as much about communicating as it is about relating to others
Episodic memory isn't essentially autonoetic
Episodic memory must be grounded in reality in order to be useful in communication
Episodic memory solves both social and nonsocial problems, and evolved to fulfill many different functions
Epistemic authority, episodic memory, and the sense of self
False memories, nonbelieved memories, and the unresolved primacy of communication
Misconceptions about adaptive function
More to episodic memory than epistemic assertion: The role of social bonds and interpersonal connection
Morgan's canon is not evidence
Remembered events are unexpected
Retrieval is central to the distinctive function of episodic memory
Sleep to be social: The critical role of sleep and memory for social interaction
The communicative function of destination memory
The dynamics of episodic memory functions
The sociocultural functions of episodic memory
Using episodic memory to gauge implicit and/or indeterminate social commitments
What psychology and cognitive neuroscience know about the communicative function of memory
Why episodic memory may not be for communication
“Truth be told” – Semantic memory as the scaffold for veridical communication
Author response
What is it to remember?